军团菌和原生动物的水生态:环境和公共卫生观点。

Paola Borella, Elisa Guerrieri, Isabella Marchesi, Moreno Bondi, Patrizia Messi
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引用次数: 132

摘要

军团菌的生态学研究对于更好地了解其在自然环境中的来源、进入人工水系的机制以及使其在水生生境中生存和生长的因素至关重要。军团菌表现出独特的多种策略来适应通常会损害其他细菌生存的应激环境条件。这些策略包括进入有活力但不可培养(VBNC)状态的能力,在各种原生动物(如变形虫)的细胞内繁殖的能力,在生物膜内作为自由生物体生存的能力,以及被其他水生细菌的存在增强/抑制的能力。宿主与寄生虫的相互作用已被证明是嗜肺乳杆菌发病机制和生态学的核心。细菌-原生动物的相互作用有助于军团菌在水系统中的种群扩大,代表了对不利环境条件的庇护,作为感染的储存库,并通过启动病原体感染人类细胞来促进毒力。军团菌能够在广泛存在于人造水系统的生物膜内作为自由有机体长期存活。生物膜提供庇护和营养,表现出对杀菌剂化合物和氯化作用的显著抗性,因此代表了军团菌在这种环境中持续存在的生态位。进一步了解与生物膜相关的军团菌可能有助于采取有效的控制措施来预防军团菌病。最后,控制军团菌污染的新视角可能来自对能够抑制军团菌在自然和人工水系统中生长的水生细菌的研究。
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Water ecology of Legionella and protozoan: environmental and public health perspectives.

Ecological studies on Legionella spp. are essential to better understand their sources in the natural environments, the mechanism of their entry into man-made water systems and the factors enabling their survival and growth in aquatic habitats. Legionella spp. exhibits peculiar and multiple strategies to adapt to stressful environment conditions which normally impair other germ survival. These strategies include the ability to enter in a viable but non-cultivable (VBNC) state, to multiply intracellularly within a variety of protozoa, such as amoebae, to survive as free organisms within biofilms and to be enhanced/inhibited by the presence of other aquatic bacteria. The host-parasite interaction has been shown to be central in the pathogenesis and ecology of L. pneumophila. The bacterial-protozoan interaction contributes to the amplification of Legionella population in water systems, represents a shelter against unfavourable environmental conditions, acts as a reservoir of infection and contributes to virulence by priming the pathogen to infect human cells. Legionella is able to survive as free organism for long periods within biofilms which are widespread in man-made water systems. Biofilm provides shelter and nutrients, exhibits a remarkable resistance to biocide compounds and chlorination, thus representing ecological niches for legionella persistence in such environments. Further knowledge on biofilm-associated legionellae may lead to effective control measures to prevent legionellosis. Lastly, new perspectives in controlling legionella contamination can arise from investigations on aquatic bacteria able to inhibit legionella growth in natural and artificial water systems.

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